I have a shared library which I want to access symbols from the main program. For example:
main.c
#include <stdio.h>
void bar(void) { puts("bar"); }
extern void foo(void);
int main(void) {
foo();
return 0;
}
foo.c
#include <stdio.h>
extern void bar(void);
void foo(void) {
puts("foo");
bar();
}
I compile and run like:
gcc -c -fpic foo.c
gcc -shared -o libfoo.so foo.o
gcc -L$(pwd) -o test main.c -lfoo
./test
And I get the output I expect:
foo
bar
However, I must use dlopen()
and dlsym()
because I want to have control over when the library is loaded. The changed files are:
main.c
#include <stdio.h>
#include <dlfcn.h>
void bar(void) { puts("bar"); }
int main(void) {
void *handle = dlopen("./libfoo.so", RTLD_LAZY);
void (*foo)(void) = (void(*)(void))dlsym(handle,"foo");
foo();
return 0;
}
foo.c
#include <stdio.h>
#include <dlfcn.h>
extern void bar(void);
void foo(void) {
puts("foo");
bar();
}
I instead compile and run with:
gcc -c -fpic foo.c
gcc -shared -o libfoo.so foo.o
gcc -o test main.c -ldl
./test
However, this time I get the output
foo
./test: symbol lookup error: ./libfoo.so: undefined symbol: bar
How can I reference symbols in the main program from libfoo?